Rockport man indicted by federal grand jury for felony gun possession
PORTLAND — A Rockport man was indicted by a federal grand jury for possessing a firearm Dec. 13.
Convicted felon Jeremy H. Rogers, 25, appeared in U.S. District Court in Portland.
Rogers was arrested Aug. 22 by Thomaston Police Chief Tim Hoppe and charged with felony terrorizing, felony terrorizing with a dangerous weapon and felony possession of a firearm.
The federal government took over the case Sept. 30.
If convicted, Rogers could face a maximum prison sentence of 10 years along with a fine up to $250,000, and supervised release for up to two years following his release from prison, according to the indictment.
A date has not yet been scheduled for his trial.
Rogers is a convicted felon in Connecticut and was sentenced to two years in jail for criminal possession of a firearm, with the risk of injuring a child. He was paroled from jail after 13 months.
At the time of his arrest, his Facebook page showed that he was living in Rockport.
According to the affidavit initially filed in Knox County Unified Court, Thomaston Police Chief Tim Hoppe alerted Rockport police that he received notification from the New York State Police stating that Rogers had allegedly sent a video via Facebook messenger to a woman in New York while wearing a mask with an AR-15 firearm. In the video, Rogers said he was going to Walmart, according to the affidavit.
A second video showed Rogers, this time without a mask, making belittling comments about a woman while pointing a gun at his head, according to the affidavit.
Although Rogers did not mention a specific Walmart in this threats, police and Walmart management decided to close the Thomaston store since it is the closest to Rockport. The store closed at 9 p.m. Wednesday evening, Aug. 21, and reopened with normal business hours the following morning.
Police also found another video on Facebook, this time showing Rogers shooting off a semi-automatic AR-15 rifle into the air at a Mount Pleasant Street property in Rockport, police said. They said that the property was heavily fenced with barbed wire on top of the fence.
When local police and the FBI interviewed Rogers, he admitted that about four days prior to his arrest he had made the video of himself wearing the ski mask and stating that he was going to Walmart, but he said the comment was intended as a joke.
Parts of the affidavit filed by the FBI and included in the indictment, stated that when Rogers posted a photograph of the rifle, he said, “Wanna see my new Walmart killer?”
“I got so bored I bought a bunch of pellets and shotgun shells. I named her Bella,” Rogers also stated in the Facebook posts, according to the FBI affidavit.
After Rogers was taken into custody, police searched his residence in Rockport and found several firearms including a Glock and Russian 9 mm handguns and an AR-15 assault rifle. Police said that the Glock handgun and assault rifle appeared to the same weapons that Rogers showed when he posted videos of himself on Facebook.
Rogers made his initial appearance in Knox County Unified Court Aug. 23 before Judge Barbara Raimondi.
He has been held at the Knox County Jail in Rockland in “state detention” on $50,000 cash bail. On Sept. 15, he wrote a handwritten letter from jail requesting a bail reduction hearing.
“My current bail is set as $50,000 cash which is very unreasonable and is why I am requesting this hearing,” Rogers stated in his letter.
A hearing that was scheduled on Sept. 26 for Rogers in Knox County Unified Court for allegedly threatening on Facebook to take a gun to Walmart, was postponed due to the possibility that he would be charged under federal law.
Related story:
https://www.penbaypilot.com/article/hearing-postponed-man-who-threatened-take-gun-walmart/124987
Sarah Shepherd can be reached at news@penbaypilot.com
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